China sent Australia’s recycling industry into a spin when it banned most waste imports. Now it’s tackling a home-grown rubbish crisis. Bill Birtles looks at China’s own war on waste and asks: is it winning?
Read More: https://ab.co/2LXD5WN
WatchForeign Correspondent on iview: http://iview.abc.net.au/programs/foreign-correspondent
SUBSCRIBE: http://bit.ly/ABCNEWSAUS
About Foreign Correspondent:
Foreign Correspondent is the prime-time international public affairs program on Australia's national broadcaster, ABC-TV. We produce half-hour duration in-depth reports for broadcast across the ABC's television channels and digital platforms. Since 1992, our teams have journeyed to more than 170 countries to report on war, natural calamity and social and political upheaval – through the eyes of the people at the heart of it all.
Connect with Foreign Correspondent:
Like Foreign on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/ABCForeignCorrespondent
Follow Foreign on Twitter: https://twitter.com/foreignofficial
Contributions may be removed if they violate ABC’sOnlineTerms of Use http://www.abc.net.au/conditions.htm (Section 3). This is an official Australian Broadcasting CorporationYouTube channel
Can China Dump Its WasteAddiction? | Foreign Correspondent

published:07 Aug 2018

views:92713

We went to the single most polluted place on earth, the coal-mining town of Linfen in Shanxi Province, China, where kids play in dirty rivers and the sun sets early behind a thick curtain of smog.
Watch part 2 here: http://bit.ly/Toxic-China-2
Check out "Toxic: America's Water Crisis" here:
http://bit.ly/Water-Crisis-1
Check out the Best ofVICE here: http://bit.ly/VICE-Best-Of
Check out our full video catalog: http://bit.ly/VICE-Videos
Videos, daily editorial and more: http://vice.com
Like VICE on Facebook: http://fb.com/vice
Follow VICE on Twitter: http://twitter.com/vice
Read our tumblr: http://vicemag.tumblr.com

The UK sends large amounts of waste plastic and paper to China every year.
But a new ban, ordered by the Beijing government, is about to stop most of that - and it could have a significant impact on recycling in the UK.
Please subscribe HERE http://bit.ly/1rbfUog
WorldIn Pictures https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLS3XGZxi7cBX37n4R0UGJN-TLiQOm7ZTP
Big Hitters https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLS3XGZxi7cBUME-LUrFkDwFmiEc3jwMXP
Just Good News https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLS3XGZxi7cBUsYo_P26cjihXLN-k3w246

published:02 Jan 2018

views:104910

China is officially declaring war on foreign garbage. For years, China has benefited from recyclable plastic imports due to energy production and the boom of low-value added manufacturing. But this disposal of overseas waste has proved detrimental to our environment and health. Meanwhile piecemeal efforts to encourage recycling and waste-sorting were far outstripped by rising consumption by China’s expanding middle class over the past decade, which has seen China grow to become the world’s biggest garbage generator by weight.
Subscribe to us on YouTube: https://goo.gl/lP12gA
Download our APP on Apple Store (iOS): https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/cctvnews-app/id922456579?l=zh&ls=1&mt=8
Download our APP on Google Play (Android): https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.imib.cctv
Follow us on:
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/ChinaGlobalTVNetwork/
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/cgtn/?hl=zh-cn
Twitter: https://twitter.com/CGTNOfficial
Pinterest: https://www.pinterest.com/CGTNOfficial/
Tumblr: http://cctvnews.tumblr.com/
Weibo: http://weibo.com/cctvnewsbeijing

published:29 Nov 2017

views:12022

In recent years, Beijing has experienced explosive economic growth, which has led to a massive boom in population, construction projects unprecedented in scale... and, in turn, a tremendous swell in the amount of garbage the city produces. Photographer and director Wang Jiu-liang spent two years fearlessly documenting Beijing's unholy cycle of consumption and waste, traveling 15,000 kilometers around the outskirts of the city, visiting 500 landfills (not nearly all of them), and shooting 10,000 photographs and 60 hours of video. In Beijing Besieged by Waste, following on the heels of his eye-opening art exhibition, Wang assembles jaw-dropping photos, poignant observational visits with the scavengers who live and work in the dumps, and effective satellite maps into a sobering meditation on one of humanity's gravest issues.
Putrid rivers. Mounds of tar-black silt residue from sewage treatment plants. Sheep grazing on hills of trash, the sky behind them thick with new concrete high-rises and towering construction cranes. Wisely, Wang lets these haunting images speak for themselves, confident that the sight of such mountains of filth and waste will elicit shock and awe without cinematic embellishment. His quiet voice and gentle hand as a director only amplify the inflammatory nature of his topic. Few solutions are on offer, but merely exposing the horrors serves as a call to act before Beijing, then China, then the entire planet, is swallowed by garbage

published:28 Sep 2011

views:5167

See how Beijing is protecting their own environment by letting the waste turn into bus tickets
Thanks for watching this video
Do like share and subscribe to my YouTube channelThank you......................

published:18 Oct 2018

views:1

The city may look spotless, but behind the scenes, Beijing has a growing problem with trash. The FT's LeslieHook visits landfill sites, recycling centres and an incineration plant to take a look at how the city is coping with its ever increasing quantity of rubbish.
For more video content from the Financial Times visit: http://www.ft.com/video
Related article: http://www.ft.com/intl/cms/s/0/3ac0fc10-7ed7-11e1-b009-00144feab49a.html
http://www.FT.com/

published:13 Jul 2012

views:689

For more news and videos visit ☛ http://english.ntdtv.com
Follow us on Twitter ☛ http://twitter.com/NTDTelevision
Add us on Facebook ☛ http://facebook.com/NTDTelevision
It looks like Beijing is surrounded by a ring of waste. A photo-journalist has been documenting the problem since 2008. Wang Jiuliang recently released a documentary featuring his work, and it has gained the attention of Chinese netizens and the media.
These yellow pins around Beijing mark the unusual canvases for artist Wang Jiuliang. Since 2008, Wang has been documenting trash sites and landfills around China's capital. So far, he's photographed more than four hundred of these. Wang says his work shows that Beijing is besieged by waste.
His work has been exhibited in the Mainland and abroad. Most recently he released a documentary film on the unsightly, often stomach-wrenching phenomenon.
Herds of sheep feeding from waste. Peasants living under the weight of trash. These are just some of the snapshots of Beijing's surrounding landscape—captured through Wang's camera lens.
Most of the trash dumps Wang has come across are illegal. Many of them are remains of mining activity. The empty land is leased, and turned into lucrative stations for collecting waste.
Alongside his photographs, Wang has also recorded his journey on tape. In April, he released his documentary "Beijing Besieged by Waste."
His efforts to highlight the problem have caught the attention of Chinese netizens. This post on the popular Tianya forum has attracted more than 130,000 views. Some have posted their own photos documenting the problem around the rest of the country.
Waste management in China has not developed alongside the push for economic success. Chinese media has reported that regulatory emphasis has been on waste incinerators and landfills, rather than on effective recycling practices.

published:06 Jul 2011

views:2552

The first bituminous road paved with recycled construction wastes in Beijing is now ready for traffic.
Located in Sunhe Town of Beijing's Chaoyang District, the road was paved using materials recycled from building wastes including bricks and tiles. It has just completed its trial run and is ready to come into service.
http://www.cctvplus.com/news/20171030/8064843.shtml#!language=1
Subscribe us on Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/c/CCTVPlus
CCTV+ official website: http://www.cctvplus.com/
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/cctv-news-content
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/NewsContent.CCTVPLUS
Twitter: https://twitter.com/CCTV_Plus

China Railways BJ

BJ were made in two different versions, a standard version and a kou'an (port) version. China Railways DF7D, a diesel electric locomotive based on DF7B, has a similar appearance to the Beijing locomotive.

North Korea

From 2002 the Korean State Railway has received a number of BJ class locomotives second-hand from China. They are used mostly for heavy shunting and on local freight trains around P'yŏngyang. Thirty have been delivered, numbered in the 내연301 - 내연330 series (내연 = Naeyŏn, "internal combustion"); most are still painted in their original Chinese blue livery, but a few have been repainted into the standard North Korean scheme of light blue over dark green.

Can China Dump Its Waste Addiction? | Foreign Correspondent

China sent Australia’s recycling industry into a spin when it banned most waste imports. Now it’s tackling a home-grown rubbish crisis. Bill Birtles looks at China’s own war on waste and asks: is it winning?
Read More: https://ab.co/2LXD5WN
WatchForeign Correspondent on iview: http://iview.abc.net.au/programs/foreign-correspondent
SUBSCRIBE: http://bit.ly/ABCNEWSAUS
About Foreign Correspondent:
Foreign Correspondent is the prime-time international public affairs program on Australia's national broadcaster, ABC-TV. We produce half-hour duration in-depth reports for broadcast across the ABC's television channels and digital platforms. Since 1992, our teams have journeyed to more than 170 countries to report on war, natural calamity and social and political upheaval – through the eyes of the people at the heart of it all.
Connect with Foreign Correspondent:
Like Foreign on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/ABCForeignCorrespondent
Follow Foreign on Twitter: https://twitter.com/foreignofficial
Contributions may be removed if they violate ABC’sOnlineTerms of Use http://www.abc.net.au/conditions.htm (Section 3). This is an official Australian Broadcasting CorporationYouTube channel
Can China Dump Its WasteAddiction? | Foreign Correspondent

13:58

The Devastating Effects of Pollution in China (Part 1/2)

The Devastating Effects of Pollution in China (Part 1/2)

The Devastating Effects of Pollution in China (Part 1/2)

We went to the single most polluted place on earth, the coal-mining town of Linfen in Shanxi Province, China, where kids play in dirty rivers and the sun sets early behind a thick curtain of smog.
Watch part 2 here: http://bit.ly/Toxic-China-2
Check out "Toxic: America's Water Crisis" here:
http://bit.ly/Water-Crisis-1
Check out the Best ofVICE here: http://bit.ly/VICE-Best-Of
Check out our full video catalog: http://bit.ly/VICE-Videos
Videos, daily editorial and more: http://vice.com
Like VICE on Facebook: http://fb.com/vice
Follow VICE on Twitter: http://twitter.com/vice
Read our tumblr: http://vicemag.tumblr.com

Why China doesn't want your waste anymore - BBC News

The UK sends large amounts of waste plastic and paper to China every year.
But a new ban, ordered by the Beijing government, is about to stop most of that - and it could have a significant impact on recycling in the UK.
Please subscribe HERE http://bit.ly/1rbfUog
WorldIn Pictures https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLS3XGZxi7cBX37n4R0UGJN-TLiQOm7ZTP
Big Hitters https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLS3XGZxi7cBUME-LUrFkDwFmiEc3jwMXP
Just Good News https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLS3XGZxi7cBUsYo_P26cjihXLN-k3w246

28:16

China's war on garbage

China's war on garbage

China's war on garbage

China is officially declaring war on foreign garbage. For years, China has benefited from recyclable plastic imports due to energy production and the boom of low-value added manufacturing. But this disposal of overseas waste has proved detrimental to our environment and health. Meanwhile piecemeal efforts to encourage recycling and waste-sorting were far outstripped by rising consumption by China’s expanding middle class over the past decade, which has seen China grow to become the world’s biggest garbage generator by weight.
Subscribe to us on YouTube: https://goo.gl/lP12gA
Download our APP on Apple Store (iOS): https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/cctvnews-app/id922456579?l=zh&ls=1&mt=8
Download our APP on Google Play (Android): https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.imib.cctv
Follow us on:
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/ChinaGlobalTVNetwork/
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/cgtn/?hl=zh-cn
Twitter: https://twitter.com/CGTNOfficial
Pinterest: https://www.pinterest.com/CGTNOfficial/
Tumblr: http://cctvnews.tumblr.com/
Weibo: http://weibo.com/cctvnewsbeijing

2:00

Beijing Besieged by Waste-Trailer

Beijing Besieged by Waste-Trailer

Beijing Besieged by Waste-Trailer

In recent years, Beijing has experienced explosive economic growth, which has led to a massive boom in population, construction projects unprecedented in scale... and, in turn, a tremendous swell in the amount of garbage the city produces. Photographer and director Wang Jiu-liang spent two years fearlessly documenting Beijing's unholy cycle of consumption and waste, traveling 15,000 kilometers around the outskirts of the city, visiting 500 landfills (not nearly all of them), and shooting 10,000 photographs and 60 hours of video. In Beijing Besieged by Waste, following on the heels of his eye-opening art exhibition, Wang assembles jaw-dropping photos, poignant observational visits with the scavengers who live and work in the dumps, and effective satellite maps into a sobering meditation on one of humanity's gravest issues.
Putrid rivers. Mounds of tar-black silt residue from sewage treatment plants. Sheep grazing on hills of trash, the sky behind them thick with new concrete high-rises and towering construction cranes. Wisely, Wang lets these haunting images speak for themselves, confident that the sight of such mountains of filth and waste will elicit shock and awe without cinematic embellishment. His quiet voice and gentle hand as a director only amplify the inflammatory nature of his topic. Few solutions are on offer, but merely exposing the horrors serves as a call to act before Beijing, then China, then the entire planet, is swallowed by garbage

1:07

See how Beijing is protecting their own environment by letting the waste turn into bus tickets

See how Beijing is protecting their own environment by letting the waste turn into bus tickets

See how Beijing is protecting their own environment by letting the waste turn into bus tickets

See how Beijing is protecting their own environment by letting the waste turn into bus tickets
Thanks for watching this video
Do like share and subscribe to my YouTube channelThank you......................

1:44

Beijing trash

Beijing trash

Beijing trash

The city may look spotless, but behind the scenes, Beijing has a growing problem with trash. The FT's LeslieHook visits landfill sites, recycling centres and an incineration plant to take a look at how the city is coping with its ever increasing quantity of rubbish.
For more video content from the Financial Times visit: http://www.ft.com/video
Related article: http://www.ft.com/intl/cms/s/0/3ac0fc10-7ed7-11e1-b009-00144feab49a.html
http://www.FT.com/

2:00

Photographer Captures Beijing's Ring of Waste

Photographer Captures Beijing's Ring of Waste

Photographer Captures Beijing's Ring of Waste

For more news and videos visit ☛ http://english.ntdtv.com
Follow us on Twitter ☛ http://twitter.com/NTDTelevision
Add us on Facebook ☛ http://facebook.com/NTDTelevision
It looks like Beijing is surrounded by a ring of waste. A photo-journalist has been documenting the problem since 2008. Wang Jiuliang recently released a documentary featuring his work, and it has gained the attention of Chinese netizens and the media.
These yellow pins around Beijing mark the unusual canvases for artist Wang Jiuliang. Since 2008, Wang has been documenting trash sites and landfills around China's capital. So far, he's photographed more than four hundred of these. Wang says his work shows that Beijing is besieged by waste.
His work has been exhibited in the Mainland and abroad. Most recently he released a documentary film on the unsightly, often stomach-wrenching phenomenon.
Herds of sheep feeding from waste. Peasants living under the weight of trash. These are just some of the snapshots of Beijing's surrounding landscape—captured through Wang's camera lens.
Most of the trash dumps Wang has come across are illegal. Many of them are remains of mining activity. The empty land is leased, and turned into lucrative stations for collecting waste.
Alongside his photographs, Wang has also recorded his journey on tape. In April, he released his documentary "Beijing Besieged by Waste."
His efforts to highlight the problem have caught the attention of Chinese netizens. This post on the popular Tianya forum has attracted more than 130,000 views. Some have posted their own photos documenting the problem around the rest of the country.
Waste management in China has not developed alongside the push for economic success. Chinese media has reported that regulatory emphasis has been on waste incinerators and landfills, rather than on effective recycling practices.

1:27

Beijing Recycles Construction Wastes to Build Road

Beijing Recycles Construction Wastes to Build Road

Beijing Recycles Construction Wastes to Build Road

The first bituminous road paved with recycled construction wastes in Beijing is now ready for traffic.
Located in Sunhe Town of Beijing's Chaoyang District, the road was paved using materials recycled from building wastes including bricks and tiles. It has just completed its trial run and is ready to come into service.
http://www.cctvplus.com/news/20171030/8064843.shtml#!language=1
Subscribe us on Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/c/CCTVPlus
CCTV+ official website: http://www.cctvplus.com/
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/cctv-news-content
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/NewsContent.CCTVPLUS
Twitter: https://twitter.com/CCTV_Plus

Giant incinerator facility burns Beijing's trash

The amount of waste generated every day in Beijing now surpasses 20,000 tons. Incineration has become a primary way to deal with all that trash. CGTN’s Ning Hong visited one of the city’s most advanced incinerators.

2:06

What Chinese people think of the housing price in Chinese capital Beijing

What Chinese people think of the housing price in Chinese capital Beijing

What Chinese people think of the housing price in Chinese capital Beijing

Can China Dump Its Waste Addiction? | Foreign Correspondent

China sent Australia’s recycling industry into a spin when it banned most waste imports. Now it’s tackling a home-grown rubbish crisis. Bill Birtles looks at China’s own war on waste and asks: is it winning?
Read More: https://ab.co/2LXD5WN
WatchForeign Correspondent on iview: http://iview.abc.net.au/programs/foreign-correspondent
SUBSCRIBE: http://bit.ly/ABCNEWSAUS
About Foreign Correspondent:
Foreign Correspondent is the prime-time international public affairs program on Australia's national broadcaster, ABC-TV. We produce half-hour duration in-depth reports for broadcast across the ABC's television channels and digital platforms. Since 1992, our teams have journeyed to more than 170 countries to report on war, natural calamity and social and political upheaval – through the eyes ...

published: 07 Aug 2018

The Devastating Effects of Pollution in China (Part 1/2)

We went to the single most polluted place on earth, the coal-mining town of Linfen in Shanxi Province, China, where kids play in dirty rivers and the sun sets early behind a thick curtain of smog.
Watch part 2 here: http://bit.ly/Toxic-China-2
Check out "Toxic: America's Water Crisis" here:
http://bit.ly/Water-Crisis-1
Check out the Best ofVICE here: http://bit.ly/VICE-Best-Of
Check out our full video catalog: http://bit.ly/VICE-Videos
Videos, daily editorial and more: http://vice.com
Like VICE on Facebook: http://fb.com/vice
Follow VICE on Twitter: http://twitter.com/vice
Read our tumblr: http://vicemag.tumblr.com

Why China doesn't want your waste anymore - BBC News

The UK sends large amounts of waste plastic and paper to China every year.
But a new ban, ordered by the Beijing government, is about to stop most of that - and it could have a significant impact on recycling in the UK.
Please subscribe HERE http://bit.ly/1rbfUog
WorldIn Pictures https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLS3XGZxi7cBX37n4R0UGJN-TLiQOm7ZTP
Big Hitters https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLS3XGZxi7cBUME-LUrFkDwFmiEc3jwMXP
Just Good News https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLS3XGZxi7cBUsYo_P26cjihXLN-k3w246

published: 02 Jan 2018

China's war on garbage

China is officially declaring war on foreign garbage. For years, China has benefited from recyclable plastic imports due to energy production and the boom of low-value added manufacturing. But this disposal of overseas waste has proved detrimental to our environment and health. Meanwhile piecemeal efforts to encourage recycling and waste-sorting were far outstripped by rising consumption by China’s expanding middle class over the past decade, which has seen China grow to become the world’s biggest garbage generator by weight.
Subscribe to us on YouTube: https://goo.gl/lP12gA
Download our APP on Apple Store (iOS): https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/cctvnews-app/id922456579?l=zh&ls=1&mt=8
Download our APP on Google Play (Android): https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.imib.cctv
...

published: 29 Nov 2017

Beijing Besieged by Waste-Trailer

In recent years, Beijing has experienced explosive economic growth, which has led to a massive boom in population, construction projects unprecedented in scale... and, in turn, a tremendous swell in the amount of garbage the city produces. Photographer and director Wang Jiu-liang spent two years fearlessly documenting Beijing's unholy cycle of consumption and waste, traveling 15,000 kilometers around the outskirts of the city, visiting 500 landfills (not nearly all of them), and shooting 10,000 photographs and 60 hours of video. In Beijing Besieged by Waste, following on the heels of his eye-opening art exhibition, Wang assembles jaw-dropping photos, poignant observational visits with the scavengers who live and work in the dumps, and effective satellite maps into a sobering meditation on ...

published: 28 Sep 2011

See how Beijing is protecting their own environment by letting the waste turn into bus tickets

See how Beijing is protecting their own environment by letting the waste turn into bus tickets
Thanks for watching this video
Do like share and subscribe to my YouTube channelThank you......................

published: 18 Oct 2018

Beijing trash

The city may look spotless, but behind the scenes, Beijing has a growing problem with trash. The FT's LeslieHook visits landfill sites, recycling centres and an incineration plant to take a look at how the city is coping with its ever increasing quantity of rubbish.
For more video content from the Financial Times visit: http://www.ft.com/video
Related article: http://www.ft.com/intl/cms/s/0/3ac0fc10-7ed7-11e1-b009-00144feab49a.html
http://www.FT.com/

published: 13 Jul 2012

Photographer Captures Beijing's Ring of Waste

For more news and videos visit ☛ http://english.ntdtv.com
Follow us on Twitter ☛ http://twitter.com/NTDTelevision
Add us on Facebook ☛ http://facebook.com/NTDTelevision
It looks like Beijing is surrounded by a ring of waste. A photo-journalist has been documenting the problem since 2008. Wang Jiuliang recently released a documentary featuring his work, and it has gained the attention of Chinese netizens and the media.
These yellow pins around Beijing mark the unusual canvases for artist Wang Jiuliang. Since 2008, Wang has been documenting trash sites and landfills around China's capital. So far, he's photographed more than four hundred of these. Wang says his work shows that Beijing is besieged by waste.
His work has been exhibited in the Mainland and abroad. Most recently he re...

published: 06 Jul 2011

Beijing Recycles Construction Wastes to Build Road

The first bituminous road paved with recycled construction wastes in Beijing is now ready for traffic.
Located in Sunhe Town of Beijing's Chaoyang District, the road was paved using materials recycled from building wastes including bricks and tiles. It has just completed its trial run and is ready to come into service.
http://www.cctvplus.com/news/20171030/8064843.shtml#!language=1
Subscribe us on Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/c/CCTVPlus
CCTV+ official website: http://www.cctvplus.com/
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/cctv-news-content
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/NewsContent.CCTVPLUS
Twitter: https://twitter.com/CCTV_Plus

published: 30 Oct 2017

HUGE bike GRAVEYARDS a symbol of China's EXCESS

When something starts to make money in China, all of a sudden things go into OVERDRIVE! and everyone jumps onto the bandwagon! Nothing can demonstrate this China phenomenon more than the shared bike market that's exploded recently. Come find out what's blocking all the sidewalks in Chinese Cities!
Thanks to Camilo Koch for the Shanghai drone footage, his Instagram is: @caig
Mobike (Chinese Simplified: 摩拜单车, Móbāi Dānchē), founded and owned by Beijing Mobike TechnologyCo., Ltd. (Chinese Simplified: 北京摩拜科技有限公司), is a fully station-less bicycle-sharing system headquartered in Beijing, China. It is the world's largest bicycle operator, and in December 2016, made Shanghai the world's largest bike-share city.
In June 2017, Mobike raised $600 million in Series E funding led by Tencent, bringi...

published: 26 Oct 2017

Giant incinerator facility burns Beijing's trash

The amount of waste generated every day in Beijing now surpasses 20,000 tons. Incineration has become a primary way to deal with all that trash. CGTN’s Ning Hong visited one of the city’s most advanced incinerators.

published: 22 Apr 2017

What Chinese people think of the housing price in Chinese capital Beijing

Can China Dump Its Waste Addiction? | Foreign Correspondent

China sent Australia’s recycling industry into a spin when it banned most waste imports. Now it’s tackling a home-grown rubbish crisis. Bill Birtles looks at Ch...

China sent Australia’s recycling industry into a spin when it banned most waste imports. Now it’s tackling a home-grown rubbish crisis. Bill Birtles looks at China’s own war on waste and asks: is it winning?
Read More: https://ab.co/2LXD5WN
WatchForeign Correspondent on iview: http://iview.abc.net.au/programs/foreign-correspondent
SUBSCRIBE: http://bit.ly/ABCNEWSAUS
About Foreign Correspondent:
Foreign Correspondent is the prime-time international public affairs program on Australia's national broadcaster, ABC-TV. We produce half-hour duration in-depth reports for broadcast across the ABC's television channels and digital platforms. Since 1992, our teams have journeyed to more than 170 countries to report on war, natural calamity and social and political upheaval – through the eyes of the people at the heart of it all.
Connect with Foreign Correspondent:
Like Foreign on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/ABCForeignCorrespondent
Follow Foreign on Twitter: https://twitter.com/foreignofficial
Contributions may be removed if they violate ABC’sOnlineTerms of Use http://www.abc.net.au/conditions.htm (Section 3). This is an official Australian Broadcasting CorporationYouTube channel
Can China Dump Its WasteAddiction? | Foreign Correspondent

China sent Australia’s recycling industry into a spin when it banned most waste imports. Now it’s tackling a home-grown rubbish crisis. Bill Birtles looks at China’s own war on waste and asks: is it winning?
Read More: https://ab.co/2LXD5WN
WatchForeign Correspondent on iview: http://iview.abc.net.au/programs/foreign-correspondent
SUBSCRIBE: http://bit.ly/ABCNEWSAUS
About Foreign Correspondent:
Foreign Correspondent is the prime-time international public affairs program on Australia's national broadcaster, ABC-TV. We produce half-hour duration in-depth reports for broadcast across the ABC's television channels and digital platforms. Since 1992, our teams have journeyed to more than 170 countries to report on war, natural calamity and social and political upheaval – through the eyes of the people at the heart of it all.
Connect with Foreign Correspondent:
Like Foreign on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/ABCForeignCorrespondent
Follow Foreign on Twitter: https://twitter.com/foreignofficial
Contributions may be removed if they violate ABC’sOnlineTerms of Use http://www.abc.net.au/conditions.htm (Section 3). This is an official Australian Broadcasting CorporationYouTube channel
Can China Dump Its WasteAddiction? | Foreign Correspondent

The Devastating Effects of Pollution in China (Part 1/2)

We went to the single most polluted place on earth, the coal-mining town of Linfen in Shanxi Province, China, where kids play in dirty rivers and the sun sets e...

We went to the single most polluted place on earth, the coal-mining town of Linfen in Shanxi Province, China, where kids play in dirty rivers and the sun sets early behind a thick curtain of smog.
Watch part 2 here: http://bit.ly/Toxic-China-2
Check out "Toxic: America's Water Crisis" here:
http://bit.ly/Water-Crisis-1
Check out the Best ofVICE here: http://bit.ly/VICE-Best-Of
Check out our full video catalog: http://bit.ly/VICE-Videos
Videos, daily editorial and more: http://vice.com
Like VICE on Facebook: http://fb.com/vice
Follow VICE on Twitter: http://twitter.com/vice
Read our tumblr: http://vicemag.tumblr.com

We went to the single most polluted place on earth, the coal-mining town of Linfen in Shanxi Province, China, where kids play in dirty rivers and the sun sets early behind a thick curtain of smog.
Watch part 2 here: http://bit.ly/Toxic-China-2
Check out "Toxic: America's Water Crisis" here:
http://bit.ly/Water-Crisis-1
Check out the Best ofVICE here: http://bit.ly/VICE-Best-Of
Check out our full video catalog: http://bit.ly/VICE-Videos
Videos, daily editorial and more: http://vice.com
Like VICE on Facebook: http://fb.com/vice
Follow VICE on Twitter: http://twitter.com/vice
Read our tumblr: http://vicemag.tumblr.com

Why China doesn't want your waste anymore - BBC News

The UK sends large amounts of waste plastic and paper to China every year.
But a new ban, ordered by the Beijing government, is about to stop most of that - and...

The UK sends large amounts of waste plastic and paper to China every year.
But a new ban, ordered by the Beijing government, is about to stop most of that - and it could have a significant impact on recycling in the UK.
Please subscribe HERE http://bit.ly/1rbfUog
WorldIn Pictures https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLS3XGZxi7cBX37n4R0UGJN-TLiQOm7ZTP
Big Hitters https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLS3XGZxi7cBUME-LUrFkDwFmiEc3jwMXP
Just Good News https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLS3XGZxi7cBUsYo_P26cjihXLN-k3w246

The UK sends large amounts of waste plastic and paper to China every year.
But a new ban, ordered by the Beijing government, is about to stop most of that - and it could have a significant impact on recycling in the UK.
Please subscribe HERE http://bit.ly/1rbfUog
WorldIn Pictures https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLS3XGZxi7cBX37n4R0UGJN-TLiQOm7ZTP
Big Hitters https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLS3XGZxi7cBUME-LUrFkDwFmiEc3jwMXP
Just Good News https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLS3XGZxi7cBUsYo_P26cjihXLN-k3w246

China's war on garbage

China is officially declaring war on foreign garbage. For years, China has benefited from recyclable plastic imports due to energy production and the boom of lo...

China is officially declaring war on foreign garbage. For years, China has benefited from recyclable plastic imports due to energy production and the boom of low-value added manufacturing. But this disposal of overseas waste has proved detrimental to our environment and health. Meanwhile piecemeal efforts to encourage recycling and waste-sorting were far outstripped by rising consumption by China’s expanding middle class over the past decade, which has seen China grow to become the world’s biggest garbage generator by weight.
Subscribe to us on YouTube: https://goo.gl/lP12gA
Download our APP on Apple Store (iOS): https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/cctvnews-app/id922456579?l=zh&ls=1&mt=8
Download our APP on Google Play (Android): https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.imib.cctv
Follow us on:
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/ChinaGlobalTVNetwork/
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/cgtn/?hl=zh-cn
Twitter: https://twitter.com/CGTNOfficial
Pinterest: https://www.pinterest.com/CGTNOfficial/
Tumblr: http://cctvnews.tumblr.com/
Weibo: http://weibo.com/cctvnewsbeijing

China is officially declaring war on foreign garbage. For years, China has benefited from recyclable plastic imports due to energy production and the boom of low-value added manufacturing. But this disposal of overseas waste has proved detrimental to our environment and health. Meanwhile piecemeal efforts to encourage recycling and waste-sorting were far outstripped by rising consumption by China’s expanding middle class over the past decade, which has seen China grow to become the world’s biggest garbage generator by weight.
Subscribe to us on YouTube: https://goo.gl/lP12gA
Download our APP on Apple Store (iOS): https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/cctvnews-app/id922456579?l=zh&ls=1&mt=8
Download our APP on Google Play (Android): https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.imib.cctv
Follow us on:
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/ChinaGlobalTVNetwork/
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/cgtn/?hl=zh-cn
Twitter: https://twitter.com/CGTNOfficial
Pinterest: https://www.pinterest.com/CGTNOfficial/
Tumblr: http://cctvnews.tumblr.com/
Weibo: http://weibo.com/cctvnewsbeijing

Beijing Besieged by Waste-Trailer

In recent years, Beijing has experienced explosive economic growth, which has led to a massive boom in population, construction projects unprecedented in scale....

In recent years, Beijing has experienced explosive economic growth, which has led to a massive boom in population, construction projects unprecedented in scale... and, in turn, a tremendous swell in the amount of garbage the city produces. Photographer and director Wang Jiu-liang spent two years fearlessly documenting Beijing's unholy cycle of consumption and waste, traveling 15,000 kilometers around the outskirts of the city, visiting 500 landfills (not nearly all of them), and shooting 10,000 photographs and 60 hours of video. In Beijing Besieged by Waste, following on the heels of his eye-opening art exhibition, Wang assembles jaw-dropping photos, poignant observational visits with the scavengers who live and work in the dumps, and effective satellite maps into a sobering meditation on one of humanity's gravest issues.
Putrid rivers. Mounds of tar-black silt residue from sewage treatment plants. Sheep grazing on hills of trash, the sky behind them thick with new concrete high-rises and towering construction cranes. Wisely, Wang lets these haunting images speak for themselves, confident that the sight of such mountains of filth and waste will elicit shock and awe without cinematic embellishment. His quiet voice and gentle hand as a director only amplify the inflammatory nature of his topic. Few solutions are on offer, but merely exposing the horrors serves as a call to act before Beijing, then China, then the entire planet, is swallowed by garbage

In recent years, Beijing has experienced explosive economic growth, which has led to a massive boom in population, construction projects unprecedented in scale... and, in turn, a tremendous swell in the amount of garbage the city produces. Photographer and director Wang Jiu-liang spent two years fearlessly documenting Beijing's unholy cycle of consumption and waste, traveling 15,000 kilometers around the outskirts of the city, visiting 500 landfills (not nearly all of them), and shooting 10,000 photographs and 60 hours of video. In Beijing Besieged by Waste, following on the heels of his eye-opening art exhibition, Wang assembles jaw-dropping photos, poignant observational visits with the scavengers who live and work in the dumps, and effective satellite maps into a sobering meditation on one of humanity's gravest issues.
Putrid rivers. Mounds of tar-black silt residue from sewage treatment plants. Sheep grazing on hills of trash, the sky behind them thick with new concrete high-rises and towering construction cranes. Wisely, Wang lets these haunting images speak for themselves, confident that the sight of such mountains of filth and waste will elicit shock and awe without cinematic embellishment. His quiet voice and gentle hand as a director only amplify the inflammatory nature of his topic. Few solutions are on offer, but merely exposing the horrors serves as a call to act before Beijing, then China, then the entire planet, is swallowed by garbage

See how Beijing is protecting their own environment by letting the waste turn into bus tickets

See how Beijing is protecting their own environment by letting the waste turn into bus tickets
Thanks for watching this video
Do like share and subscribe t...

See how Beijing is protecting their own environment by letting the waste turn into bus tickets
Thanks for watching this video
Do like share and subscribe to my YouTube channelThank you......................

See how Beijing is protecting their own environment by letting the waste turn into bus tickets
Thanks for watching this video
Do like share and subscribe to my YouTube channelThank you......................

Beijing trash

The city may look spotless, but behind the scenes, Beijing has a growing problem with trash. The FT's LeslieHook visits landfill sites, recycling centres and a...

The city may look spotless, but behind the scenes, Beijing has a growing problem with trash. The FT's LeslieHook visits landfill sites, recycling centres and an incineration plant to take a look at how the city is coping with its ever increasing quantity of rubbish.
For more video content from the Financial Times visit: http://www.ft.com/video
Related article: http://www.ft.com/intl/cms/s/0/3ac0fc10-7ed7-11e1-b009-00144feab49a.html
http://www.FT.com/

The city may look spotless, but behind the scenes, Beijing has a growing problem with trash. The FT's LeslieHook visits landfill sites, recycling centres and an incineration plant to take a look at how the city is coping with its ever increasing quantity of rubbish.
For more video content from the Financial Times visit: http://www.ft.com/video
Related article: http://www.ft.com/intl/cms/s/0/3ac0fc10-7ed7-11e1-b009-00144feab49a.html
http://www.FT.com/

Photographer Captures Beijing's Ring of Waste

For more news and videos visit ☛ http://english.ntdtv.com
Follow us on Twitter ☛ http://twitter.com/NTDTelevision
Add us on Facebook ☛ http://facebook.com/NTD...

For more news and videos visit ☛ http://english.ntdtv.com
Follow us on Twitter ☛ http://twitter.com/NTDTelevision
Add us on Facebook ☛ http://facebook.com/NTDTelevision
It looks like Beijing is surrounded by a ring of waste. A photo-journalist has been documenting the problem since 2008. Wang Jiuliang recently released a documentary featuring his work, and it has gained the attention of Chinese netizens and the media.
These yellow pins around Beijing mark the unusual canvases for artist Wang Jiuliang. Since 2008, Wang has been documenting trash sites and landfills around China's capital. So far, he's photographed more than four hundred of these. Wang says his work shows that Beijing is besieged by waste.
His work has been exhibited in the Mainland and abroad. Most recently he released a documentary film on the unsightly, often stomach-wrenching phenomenon.
Herds of sheep feeding from waste. Peasants living under the weight of trash. These are just some of the snapshots of Beijing's surrounding landscape—captured through Wang's camera lens.
Most of the trash dumps Wang has come across are illegal. Many of them are remains of mining activity. The empty land is leased, and turned into lucrative stations for collecting waste.
Alongside his photographs, Wang has also recorded his journey on tape. In April, he released his documentary "Beijing Besieged by Waste."
His efforts to highlight the problem have caught the attention of Chinese netizens. This post on the popular Tianya forum has attracted more than 130,000 views. Some have posted their own photos documenting the problem around the rest of the country.
Waste management in China has not developed alongside the push for economic success. Chinese media has reported that regulatory emphasis has been on waste incinerators and landfills, rather than on effective recycling practices.

For more news and videos visit ☛ http://english.ntdtv.com
Follow us on Twitter ☛ http://twitter.com/NTDTelevision
Add us on Facebook ☛ http://facebook.com/NTDTelevision
It looks like Beijing is surrounded by a ring of waste. A photo-journalist has been documenting the problem since 2008. Wang Jiuliang recently released a documentary featuring his work, and it has gained the attention of Chinese netizens and the media.
These yellow pins around Beijing mark the unusual canvases for artist Wang Jiuliang. Since 2008, Wang has been documenting trash sites and landfills around China's capital. So far, he's photographed more than four hundred of these. Wang says his work shows that Beijing is besieged by waste.
His work has been exhibited in the Mainland and abroad. Most recently he released a documentary film on the unsightly, often stomach-wrenching phenomenon.
Herds of sheep feeding from waste. Peasants living under the weight of trash. These are just some of the snapshots of Beijing's surrounding landscape—captured through Wang's camera lens.
Most of the trash dumps Wang has come across are illegal. Many of them are remains of mining activity. The empty land is leased, and turned into lucrative stations for collecting waste.
Alongside his photographs, Wang has also recorded his journey on tape. In April, he released his documentary "Beijing Besieged by Waste."
His efforts to highlight the problem have caught the attention of Chinese netizens. This post on the popular Tianya forum has attracted more than 130,000 views. Some have posted their own photos documenting the problem around the rest of the country.
Waste management in China has not developed alongside the push for economic success. Chinese media has reported that regulatory emphasis has been on waste incinerators and landfills, rather than on effective recycling practices.

Beijing Recycles Construction Wastes to Build Road

The first bituminous road paved with recycled construction wastes in Beijing is now ready for traffic.
Located in Sunhe Town of Beijing's Chaoyang District, t...

The first bituminous road paved with recycled construction wastes in Beijing is now ready for traffic.
Located in Sunhe Town of Beijing's Chaoyang District, the road was paved using materials recycled from building wastes including bricks and tiles. It has just completed its trial run and is ready to come into service.
http://www.cctvplus.com/news/20171030/8064843.shtml#!language=1
Subscribe us on Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/c/CCTVPlus
CCTV+ official website: http://www.cctvplus.com/
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/cctv-news-content
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/NewsContent.CCTVPLUS
Twitter: https://twitter.com/CCTV_Plus

The first bituminous road paved with recycled construction wastes in Beijing is now ready for traffic.
Located in Sunhe Town of Beijing's Chaoyang District, the road was paved using materials recycled from building wastes including bricks and tiles. It has just completed its trial run and is ready to come into service.
http://www.cctvplus.com/news/20171030/8064843.shtml#!language=1
Subscribe us on Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/c/CCTVPlus
CCTV+ official website: http://www.cctvplus.com/
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/cctv-news-content
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/NewsContent.CCTVPLUS
Twitter: https://twitter.com/CCTV_Plus

Giant incinerator facility burns Beijing's trash

The amount of waste generated every day in Beijing now surpasses 20,000 tons. Incineration has become a primary way to deal with all that trash. CGTN’s Ning Hon...

The amount of waste generated every day in Beijing now surpasses 20,000 tons. Incineration has become a primary way to deal with all that trash. CGTN’s Ning Hong visited one of the city’s most advanced incinerators.

The amount of waste generated every day in Beijing now surpasses 20,000 tons. Incineration has become a primary way to deal with all that trash. CGTN’s Ning Hong visited one of the city’s most advanced incinerators.

Can China Dump Its Waste Addiction? | Foreign Correspondent

China sent Australia’s recycling industry into a spin when it banned most waste imports. Now it’s tackling a home-grown rubbish crisis. Bill Birtles looks at China’s own war on waste and asks: is it winning?
Read More: https://ab.co/2LXD5WN
WatchForeign Correspondent on iview: http://iview.abc.net.au/programs/foreign-correspondent
SUBSCRIBE: http://bit.ly/ABCNEWSAUS
About Foreign Correspondent:
Foreign Correspondent is the prime-time international public affairs program on Australia's national broadcaster, ABC-TV. We produce half-hour duration in-depth reports for broadcast across the ABC's television channels and digital platforms. Since 1992, our teams have journeyed to more than 170 countries to report on war, natural calamity and social and political upheaval – through the eyes of the people at the heart of it all.
Connect with Foreign Correspondent:
Like Foreign on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/ABCForeignCorrespondent
Follow Foreign on Twitter: https://twitter.com/foreignofficial
Contributions may be removed if they violate ABC’sOnlineTerms of Use http://www.abc.net.au/conditions.htm (Section 3). This is an official Australian Broadcasting CorporationYouTube channel
Can China Dump Its WasteAddiction? | Foreign Correspondent

The Devastating Effects of Pollution in China (Part 1/2)

We went to the single most polluted place on earth, the coal-mining town of Linfen in Shanxi Province, China, where kids play in dirty rivers and the sun sets early behind a thick curtain of smog.
Watch part 2 here: http://bit.ly/Toxic-China-2
Check out "Toxic: America's Water Crisis" here:
http://bit.ly/Water-Crisis-1
Check out the Best ofVICE here: http://bit.ly/VICE-Best-Of
Check out our full video catalog: http://bit.ly/VICE-Videos
Videos, daily editorial and more: http://vice.com
Like VICE on Facebook: http://fb.com/vice
Follow VICE on Twitter: http://twitter.com/vice
Read our tumblr: http://vicemag.tumblr.com

Why China doesn't want your waste anymore - BBC News

The UK sends large amounts of waste plastic and paper to China every year.
But a new ban, ordered by the Beijing government, is about to stop most of that - and it could have a significant impact on recycling in the UK.
Please subscribe HERE http://bit.ly/1rbfUog
WorldIn Pictures https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLS3XGZxi7cBX37n4R0UGJN-TLiQOm7ZTP
Big Hitters https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLS3XGZxi7cBUME-LUrFkDwFmiEc3jwMXP
Just Good News https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLS3XGZxi7cBUsYo_P26cjihXLN-k3w246

China's war on garbage

China is officially declaring war on foreign garbage. For years, China has benefited from recyclable plastic imports due to energy production and the boom of low-value added manufacturing. But this disposal of overseas waste has proved detrimental to our environment and health. Meanwhile piecemeal efforts to encourage recycling and waste-sorting were far outstripped by rising consumption by China’s expanding middle class over the past decade, which has seen China grow to become the world’s biggest garbage generator by weight.
Subscribe to us on YouTube: https://goo.gl/lP12gA
Download our APP on Apple Store (iOS): https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/cctvnews-app/id922456579?l=zh&ls=1&mt=8
Download our APP on Google Play (Android): https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.imib.cctv
Follow us on:
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/ChinaGlobalTVNetwork/
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/cgtn/?hl=zh-cn
Twitter: https://twitter.com/CGTNOfficial
Pinterest: https://www.pinterest.com/CGTNOfficial/
Tumblr: http://cctvnews.tumblr.com/
Weibo: http://weibo.com/cctvnewsbeijing

Beijing Besieged by Waste-Trailer

In recent years, Beijing has experienced explosive economic growth, which has led to a massive boom in population, construction projects unprecedented in scale... and, in turn, a tremendous swell in the amount of garbage the city produces. Photographer and director Wang Jiu-liang spent two years fearlessly documenting Beijing's unholy cycle of consumption and waste, traveling 15,000 kilometers around the outskirts of the city, visiting 500 landfills (not nearly all of them), and shooting 10,000 photographs and 60 hours of video. In Beijing Besieged by Waste, following on the heels of his eye-opening art exhibition, Wang assembles jaw-dropping photos, poignant observational visits with the scavengers who live and work in the dumps, and effective satellite maps into a sobering meditation on one of humanity's gravest issues.
Putrid rivers. Mounds of tar-black silt residue from sewage treatment plants. Sheep grazing on hills of trash, the sky behind them thick with new concrete high-rises and towering construction cranes. Wisely, Wang lets these haunting images speak for themselves, confident that the sight of such mountains of filth and waste will elicit shock and awe without cinematic embellishment. His quiet voice and gentle hand as a director only amplify the inflammatory nature of his topic. Few solutions are on offer, but merely exposing the horrors serves as a call to act before Beijing, then China, then the entire planet, is swallowed by garbage

See how Beijing is protecting their own environment by letting the waste turn into bus tickets

See how Beijing is protecting their own environment by letting the waste turn into bus tickets
Thanks for watching this video
Do like share and subscribe to my YouTube channelThank you......................

Beijing trash

The city may look spotless, but behind the scenes, Beijing has a growing problem with trash. The FT's LeslieHook visits landfill sites, recycling centres and an incineration plant to take a look at how the city is coping with its ever increasing quantity of rubbish.
For more video content from the Financial Times visit: http://www.ft.com/video
Related article: http://www.ft.com/intl/cms/s/0/3ac0fc10-7ed7-11e1-b009-00144feab49a.html
http://www.FT.com/

Photographer Captures Beijing's Ring of Waste

For more news and videos visit ☛ http://english.ntdtv.com
Follow us on Twitter ☛ http://twitter.com/NTDTelevision
Add us on Facebook ☛ http://facebook.com/NTDTelevision
It looks like Beijing is surrounded by a ring of waste. A photo-journalist has been documenting the problem since 2008. Wang Jiuliang recently released a documentary featuring his work, and it has gained the attention of Chinese netizens and the media.
These yellow pins around Beijing mark the unusual canvases for artist Wang Jiuliang. Since 2008, Wang has been documenting trash sites and landfills around China's capital. So far, he's photographed more than four hundred of these. Wang says his work shows that Beijing is besieged by waste.
His work has been exhibited in the Mainland and abroad. Most recently he released a documentary film on the unsightly, often stomach-wrenching phenomenon.
Herds of sheep feeding from waste. Peasants living under the weight of trash. These are just some of the snapshots of Beijing's surrounding landscape—captured through Wang's camera lens.
Most of the trash dumps Wang has come across are illegal. Many of them are remains of mining activity. The empty land is leased, and turned into lucrative stations for collecting waste.
Alongside his photographs, Wang has also recorded his journey on tape. In April, he released his documentary "Beijing Besieged by Waste."
His efforts to highlight the problem have caught the attention of Chinese netizens. This post on the popular Tianya forum has attracted more than 130,000 views. Some have posted their own photos documenting the problem around the rest of the country.
Waste management in China has not developed alongside the push for economic success. Chinese media has reported that regulatory emphasis has been on waste incinerators and landfills, rather than on effective recycling practices.

Beijing Recycles Construction Wastes to Build Road

The first bituminous road paved with recycled construction wastes in Beijing is now ready for traffic.
Located in Sunhe Town of Beijing's Chaoyang District, the road was paved using materials recycled from building wastes including bricks and tiles. It has just completed its trial run and is ready to come into service.
http://www.cctvplus.com/news/20171030/8064843.shtml#!language=1
Subscribe us on Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/c/CCTVPlus
CCTV+ official website: http://www.cctvplus.com/
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/cctv-news-content
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/NewsContent.CCTVPLUS
Twitter: https://twitter.com/CCTV_Plus

Giant incinerator facility burns Beijing's trash

The amount of waste generated every day in Beijing now surpasses 20,000 tons. Incineration has become a primary way to deal with all that trash. CGTN’s Ning Hong visited one of the city’s most advanced incinerators.

In an attempt to stave off a wasting disease that is affecting deer and elk in much of the rest of the country, state officials on Saturday said they are implementing new restrictions on deer brought in from Tennessee... chronic wasting disease in 10 white-tailed deer in Tennessee....

With an estimated 92 million tonnes of clothing thrown out every year, the researchers say the findings have important implications for global efforts to reduce waste... the biggest consumer waste streams," lead researcher ProfessorVeena Sahajwalla said in a statement on Wednesday....

People line up outside the headquarters of Ofo to ask for refunds of their deposits in Beijing on Tuesday ...Nearly 2,000 people gathered outside the headquarters of bike-sharing giant Ofo in Beijing on Tuesday morning, anxious to know whether－and when－their deposits for the shared bikes will be returned....

Giant incinerator facility burns Beijing's trash...

What Chinese people think of the housing price in ...

Latest News for: beijing waste

In an attempt to stave off a wasting disease that is affecting deer and elk in much of the rest of the country, state officials on Saturday said they are implementing new restrictions on deer brought in from Tennessee... chronic wasting disease in 10 white-tailed deer in Tennessee....

With an estimated 92 million tonnes of clothing thrown out every year, the researchers say the findings have important implications for global efforts to reduce waste... the biggest consumer waste streams," lead researcher ProfessorVeena Sahajwalla said in a statement on Wednesday....

People line up outside the headquarters of Ofo to ask for refunds of their deposits in Beijing on Tuesday ...Nearly 2,000 people gathered outside the headquarters of bike-sharing giant Ofo in Beijing on Tuesday morning, anxious to know whether－and when－their deposits for the shared bikes will be returned....

One of Hong Kong's fiercely pro-Beijing mastheads, Wen Wei Po, has revealed itself as the stalker of an Australian academic, nearly four days after he began tweeting evidence that he was being tailed around Hong Kong ... One of Hong Kong's fiercely pro-Beijing mastheads Wen Wei Po ......

Beijing. There are times it is obvious the world has changed ... Nor her bail ... Beijing saw Meng’s arrest as a flagrant abuse of such a process ... Trump’s intervention – rebuked by the US justice department – cast an unfavorable light on the US legal system and made it look no more just than Beijing’s ... But a trade-off is exactly how it looks in Beijing ... ....

Vendors at the vegetable market on East Marret Street complain about a problem that is decades old. “The entrance which was turned into a dumping spot years ago, continues to overflow with waste every day ... R ... “We can now see pelts and waste parts of slaughtered goats dumped into the bins. The hotels nearby also throw their waste here,” she says ... Ms ... Mr....

He estimated that such false alarms – more than 3,000 a year – waste about $40,000 ... Numerous cities have started charging annual registration fees to try to reduce the time-wasting calls, including Dallas, ForthWorth and Longview....

BEIJING--Facing deepening tensions abroad and anxieties at home, China’s leader, Xi Jinping, delivered an unabashed defense of his policies Tuesday, using a key anniversary to argue that his recipe of guided growth under strong Communist Party control must not waver ... Albee Zhang contributed research from Beijing and Ailin Tang from Shanghai....

But as a long-time follower of this sector, I really feel a need to give my own opinion up front and say that Beijing is just reaping what it has sown for all of these years ... No evidence was ever given of secret backdoors or product tampering that could allow spying by Beijing, and Huawei has repeatedly denied any such interference....

Senators' final votes in the 34th Legislature went to bills on government land deals and protection for designated caregivers involved in medical marijuana home cultivation, but they rejected a proposal to pay Ko'Ku Recycling $5.9 million for a massive waste removal ... Diverting funds from 911 soon could be a crime No to $5.9M waste removal payment....